Saturday, June 29, 2013

Same-sex weddings under way in California after stay is lifted

California Attorney General Kamala Harris officiates the wedding ceremony of Kristin Perry and Sandy Stiler, plaintiffs in the Prop 8 case, at San Francisco City Hall.

By Pete Williams and M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

The two couples who challenged?the law that had?barred same-sex marriage in California?were married Friday afternoon after a federal appeals court dissolved its stay blocking same-sex marriage in the state.

On the eve of San Francisco's Pride Weekend,?State Attorney General Kamala?declared Sandra Stier, 50, and Kris Perry,?48, "spouse and spouse" shortly before 5 p.m. (8 p.m. ET) at San Francisco City Hall. In their vows, the couple took each other as?"lawfully wedded wife."


"Right now, we feel really victorious and thrilled and relieved to be at the end of this long journey and just move forward like a regular married couple," Stier said in a conference call with reporters ? but not before she introduced Perry as "my beautiful wife."

Stier said she and Perry hadn't had time to schedule a honeymoon. But Perry said that after a celebration with "all of the people we love ... Sandy and I will go somewhere alone."

Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo, one of the couples who successfully challenged California's Proposition 8, marry in Los Angeles.

About 90 minutes later in Los Angeles, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa married the other couple, Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo, on his last day in office.

The ceremony, Katami said, was "about celebrating our private commitment and our public connection."

As the ceremony began, Villaraigosa said:?"I've done a few of these over the last couple years, but never have I been prouder. Never have I been more joyful than I am today. This is a special moment."

Many state officials, including Harris and Gov. Jerry Brown, celebrated the decision Friday on Twitter:

Twitter.com

Twitter.com

San Francisco City Hall will stay open until 8 p.m. Friday and will be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday for marriage licenses. The Los Angeles County registrar and clerk's office said it was deputizing extra marriage commissioners and extending days and locations to accommodate an expected rush of weddings.

Gina Alcomendias, the clerk-recorder for Santa Clara County, said few people had shown up at the County Building because the appeals court's decision came late in the day.

But "we're going to be busy Monday, I think ? the whole week next week," Alcomendias told NBC Bay Area. "Probably for a long while."

The 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals lifted its stay two days after the Supreme Court declined to rule on Proposition 8, thereby upholding a lower court's decision overturning the ban.?The appeals court had blocked enforcement of that ruling pending the Supreme Court decision.

The justices also struck down?the Defense of Marriage Act, a 1996 federal law that barred recognition of same-sex marriages.

Supreme Court rulings generally don't take effect for 25 days. But Harris had called on the 9th Circuit to lift its stay as soon as possible Wednesday after Brown told the state's 58 counties to prepare for same-sex marriages.

Brown issued an order Friday afternoon making that official, declaring that "marriage licenses must be issued to same-sex couples immediately."

California Attorney General Kamala Harris instructs the Los Angeles County Clerk by telephone to begin same-sex marriages "immediately."

The Protect Marriage Coalition's?Proposition 8 Legal Defense Fund, which sponsored the ballot initiative, did not immediately return calls seeking comment. But in a statement, the group said it had been deprived of "our right to ask for reconsideration," calling the appeals court's decision an "outrageous act of judicial tyranny."

"Homosexual marriage is not happening because the people changed their mind," the group said in a statement. "It isn't happening because the appellate courts declared a new constitutional right. It's happening because enemies of the people have abused their power to manipulate the system and render the people voiceless."

Theodore Boutros, one of the plaintiffs' lawyers, said the appeals court was fully within its rights to lift its injunction, which simply restored the status quo in the circuit. Any attempt by opponents to seek reconsideration of the Supreme Court ruling is a separate matter, he said.

Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

Miranda Leitsinger, Norma Rubio and Sossy Dombourian of NBC News contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

Related:

Same-sex marriage supporters cheer 'Cinderella moment'; opponents vow to fight on

Historic day for gay marriage after two big court decisions

Jeff Chiu / AP

Kris Perry, left, kisses Sandra Stier as they are married Friday at San Francisco City Hall in a ceremony officiated by state Attorney General Kamala Harris.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2df2f8aa/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C280C191940A790Esame0Esex0Eweddings0Eunder0Eway0Ein0Ecalifornia0Eafter0Estay0Eis0Elifted0Dlite/story01.htm

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Same-sex marriage allowed immediately in California after stay is lifted

Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo, one of the couples who successfully challenged California's Proposition 8, marry in Los Angeles.

By Pete Williams and M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

The two couples who challenged?the law that had?barred same-sex marriage in California?were married Friday afternoon after a federal appeals court dissolved its stay blocking same-sex marriage in the state.

On the eve of San Francisco's Pride Weekend,?State Attorney General Kamala?declared Sandra Stier, 50, and Kris Perry,?48, "spouse and spouse" shortly before 5 p.m. (8 p.m. ET) at San Francisco City Hall. In their vows, the couple took each other as?"lawfully wedded wife."


"Right now, we feel really victorious and thrilled and relieved to be at the end of this long journey and just move forward like a regular married couple," Stier said in a conference call with reporters ? but not before she introduced Perry as "my beautiful wife."

Stier said she and Perry hadn't had time to schedule a honeymoon. But Perry said that after a celebration with "all of the people we love ... Sandy and I will go somewhere alone."

Jeff Chiu / AP

Kris Perry, left, kisses Sandra Stier as they are married Friday at San Francisco City Hall in a ceremony officiated by state Attorney General Kamala Harris.

?

About 90 minutes later in Los Angeles, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa married the other couple, Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo, on his last day in office.?

The ceremony, Katami said, was "about celebrating our private commitment and our public connection."

Many state officials, including Harris and Gov. Jerry Brown, celebrated the decision Friday on Twitter:

Twitter.com

Twitter.com

San Francisco City Hall will stay open until 8 p.m. Friday and will be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday for marriage licenses. The Los Angeles County registrar and clerk's office said it was deputizing extra marriage commissioners and extending days and locations to accommodate an expected rush of weddings.

Gina Alcomendias, the clerk-recorder for Santa Clara County, said few people had shown up at the County Building because the appeals court's decision came late in the day.

But "we're going to be busy Monday, I think ? the whole week next week," Alcomendias told NBC Bay Area. "Probably for a long while."

The 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals lifted its stay two days after the Supreme Court declined to rule on Proposition 8, thereby upholding a lower court's decision overturning the ban.?The appeals court had blocked enforcement of that ruling pending the Supreme Court decision.

The justices also struck down?the Defense of Marriage Act, a 1996 federal law that barred recognition of same-sex marriages.

Supreme Court rulings generally don't take effect for 25 days. But Harris had called on the 9th Circuit to lift its stay as soon as possible Wednesday after Brown told the state's 58 counties to prepare for same-sex marriages.

Brown issued an order Friday afternoon making that official, declaring that "marriage licenses must be issued to same-sex couples immediately."

California Attorney General Kamala Harris instructs the Los Angeles County Clerk by telephone to begin same-sex marriages "immediately."

The Protect Marriage Coalition's?Proposition 8 Legal Defense Fund, which sponsored the ballot initiative, did not immediately return calls seeking comment. But in a statement, the group said it had been deprived of "our right to ask for reconsideration," calling the appeals court's decision an "outrageous act of judicial tyranny."

"Homosexual marriage is not happening because the people changed their mind," the group said in a statement. "It isn't happening because the appellate courts declared a new constitutional right. It's happening because enemies of the people have abused their power to manipulate the system and render the people voiceless."

Theodore Boutros, one of the plaintiffs' lawyers, said the appeals court was fully within its rights to lift its injunction, which simply restored the status quo in the circuit. Any attempt by opponents to seek reconsideration of the Supreme Court ruling is a separate matter, he said.

Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

Miranda Leitsinger, Norma Rubio and Sossy Dombourian of NBC News contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

Related:

Same-sex marriage supporters cheer 'Cinderella moment'; opponents vow to fight on

Historic day for gay marriage after two big court decisions

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2df27e70/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C280C191940A790Esame0Esex0Emarriage0Eallowed0Eimmediately0Ein0Ecalifornia0Eafter0Estay0Eis0Elifted0Dlite/story01.htm

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Texas gov. calls 2nd special session on abortion

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Gov. Rick Perry on Wednesday called a second special session of the Texas Legislature to pass widespread abortion restrictions across the nation's second-largest state, after the first attempt by Republicans died overnight following a marathon one-woman filibuster.

Perry ordered lawmakers to meet again on July 1 to act on the abortion proposals, as well as separate bills that would boost highway funding and deal with a juvenile justice issue. The sweeping abortion rules would close nearly all the state's abortion clinics and impose other widespread restrictions.

Perry can call as many 30-day extra sessions as he likes, but lawmakers can only take up those issues he assigns.

The debate over abortion restrictions led to the most chaotic day in the Texas Legislature in modern history, starting with a marathon filibuster and ending with a down-to-the wire, frenetic vote marked by questions about whether Republicans tried to break chamber rules and jam the measure through.

Democrats put their hopes of thwarting the bill in the hands of Wendy Davis, a state senator clad in pink running shoes, for a daylong attempt to talk the bill to death. Over the duration of the speech, Davis became a social media star, even becoming the subject of a tweet from President Obama for her efforts.

But just before midnight, Republicans claimed she strayed off topic and got help with a back brace ? two things that are against filibuster rules ? and cut her off.

That cleared the way for a vote.

But when Republican Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst shouted into the microphone, trying to call the final votes, nobody seemed to hear him. Some 400 supporters jammed into the gallery had taken their feet with a deafening roar, drowning out his voice. It was, as some claimed, a "people's filibuster" ? an attempt by protesters to finish what Davis had started more than 11 hours earlier.

"Get them out!" Republican Sen. Donna Campbell shouted to a security guard. "... I want them out of here!"

As the crowd clapped and shouted "shame, shame, shame," Dewhurst gathered Republican lawmakers around Secretary of the Senate Patsy Spaw to register their votes. Democrats ran forward, holding up their cellphones, which showed it was past midnight.

But Dewhurst and other Republicans insisted the first vote was cast before midnight by the Legislature's clock and that the bill had passed.

By the time decorum was restored and the 19-10 vote in favor of the measure was recorded, the clock read 12:03 a.m. Confusion took over: The Republicans had passed the bill, but did it count? Were the votes tallied in time?

Reporters checked the Senate's official website and saw the vote registered on Wednesday, after the deadline. But a short time later, the website was updated to show the vote on Tuesday. Sen. Chuy Hinojosa produced two official printouts of the vote, each showing a different day for the same vote.

After protests from angry Democrats, senators met privately with Dewhurst for more than an hour. Eventually, he returned to the then-empty Senate chamber and declared that while the bill had passed, he didn't have time to sign it, so it wasn't approved. In return for declaring the measure dead, Democrats promised not to question the date of the vote any further.

While altering a public record is illegal, stopping the clock to allow for a vote or changing the journal before it is published are long traditions in the Texas Legislature and unlikely to lead to a prosecution.

The bill would have banned abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy and forced many clinics that perform the procedure to upgrade their facilities and be classified as ambulatory surgical centers. Also, doctors would be required to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles ? a tall order in rural communities.

The law's provision that abortions be performed at surgical centers means only five of Texas' 42 abortion clinics would remain in operation in a state 773 miles wide and 790 miles long with 26 million people. A woman living along the Mexico border or in West Texas would have to drive hundreds of miles to obtain an abortion.

Conservatives and anti-abortion campaigners joined Dewhurst in condemning the "unruly mob" for violating the Senate's decorum by screaming obscenities at Republican backers of the bill.

Texas Democrats, though, see an opportunity to capitalize just months after setting up a grassroots organization called "Battleground Texas" with a $36 million cash infusion. And they circled around Davis ? the teen mom turned Harvard Law School grad whose Twitter followers rocketed from 1,200 to 83,000 in just 24 hours.

"As Sen. Wendy Davis most powerfully emphasized, Democrats are not afraid of a fight," said Gilberto Hinojosa, Texas Democratic Party chairman. "Last night was a turning point in that story of Texas."

___

Follow Chris Tomlinson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cltomlinson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-gov-calls-2nd-special-session-abortion-211507600.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Baruch College Wins 2013 CASE Educational Fundraising Award ...

NEW YORK, NY - June 19, 2013 ? Baruch College was recently awarded the 2013 Educational Fundraising Award, an honor given by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) to superior fundraising programs at educational institutions across the country.

Baruch College was selected to receive an Overall Performance Award based on the judges? analysis of three years of fundraising data submitted to the Council for Aid to Education?s annual Voluntary Support of Education Survey (VSE). Baruch was selected as one of an exceptional group of colleges, universities, and independent schools recognized either for overall performance or overall improvement in fundraising.

?An award for superior overall performance can only happen if there is superior overall effort from every sector:students and faculty that create an intellectual environment that spurs donors to invest, a compelling vision led by the President and Deans, and a terrific fundraising staff that never let up, even in very dark economic times,? said Mark Gibbel, Vice President for College Advancement.

Baruch College raised more than $157 million, exceeding its $150 million fundraising goal and setting a new record for the number of individuals supporting the Baruch College Fund-6, 287. In addition, Baruch?s leadership giving club, 17 Lex Society, had a record number of annual members-551.

The Baruch Means Business campaign was created to support student excellence and opportunities, to strengthen the Zicklin School of Business, and to enhance the value of the Baruch degree. Lawrence Zicklin (?57 LHD [Hon.] ?99) and Lawrence J. Simon (?65) served as campaign co-chairs and received special recognition during the dinner for their leadership.

The Educational Fundraising Award recipients are evaluated by a volunteer panel of judges. When reviewing data profiles, the judging panel does not know the name of the institution tied to the data. Judges select winners based on a multitude of factors: the pattern of growth in total support (or adjusted total support if appropriate); evaluation of what contributed to the total support figure; overall breadth in program areas; pattern of growth in each program area; pattern of donor growth among alumni donors and other individual donors; impact of the 12 largest gifts on total support; total support in relation to the alumni/ae base; and the type of institution.

This year, 994 higher education institutions participated in the VSE survey. An independent data analyst narrowed the field to 412 institutions. Out of 412 colleges and universities considered, 68 higher education institutions won an award (35 in Overall Performance and 33 in Overall Improvement). The full list of winners is posted on the CASE website.

In the course of the Baruch Means Business Campaign, there were over 180 gifts made at $100,000. The generosity of donors created more than 95 new scholarships for students, endowments of three departments, an endowed center, and four endowed faculty chairs. In addition, donor gifts supported the naming of more than 19 classrooms, two conference rooms, and a variety of campus centers that enhance the education experience for students.

The silent phase of the campaign began on January 1, 2007. Baruch?s academic leaders, faculty, volunteers, and advancement team secured leadership gifts that provided the foundation for the overall success of the campaign. These gifts came from BCF trustees, key volunteers, and the College?s most generous and engaged donors.

The public launch was made at the annual Bernard Baruch Dinner on April 28, 2009, where the campaign objectives were unveiled. The campaign focused on three primary areas: Student Excellence and Opportunity; Building Our National Reputation; and Enhancing the Value of a Baruch Degree.

Some of the key milestones that occurred during the course of the Baruch Means Business campaign include:

  • In 2007, the largest capital campaign in Baruch?s history begins with one of its first, and largest, gift from Lawrence Zicklin (?57 LHD [Hon.] ?99) and his wife Carol.
  • In 2008, David Krell (MBA ?71) establishes The David Krell Chair in Finance and Economics. Endowed Chairs allow a professor to conduct research, to work closely with junior faculty members in their research, and to co-author professional papers. In 2011, the Valetin Lizana y Parrague Chair of Latin American Studies is created by Hedwig Feit.
  • Baruch unveils Studio H, a state-of-the-art journalism laboratory to bring cutting-edge technological capabilities into the classroom. The facility is made possible by Ruth Ann (LHD [Hon.] ?11) and William F. (?68, DCS [Hon.] ?11) Harnisch.
  • School of Public Affairs (SPA) receives a gift from Baruch alumna Amelia Hagedorn (?58) of $1 million to support scholarships and paid internships for undergraduate and graduate students in SPA, as well as general support for SPA and the College.
  • In 2009, the campaign goes public. Baruch College publicly announces the most ambitious campaign in its history, Baruch Means Business, at the 20th annual Bernard Baruch Dinner, having already secured $96 million in gifts and pledges.
  • In 2010, Mitchel B. Wallerstein became the 7th President of Baruch College and will lead the effort to ensure Baruch continues to provide a quality and affordable education for bright and deserving students, by focusing the final phase of the campaign (Baruch Means Business 2.0) on raising funds for scholarships, faculty support, a student center, residence hall, global outreach efforts and the creation of a pedestrian plaza on 25th street.
  • In 2011, the Department of Marketing and International Business is dedicated. Allen G. Aaronson (?48) as he makes a generous gift to rename the department as the Allen G. Aaronson Department of Marketing and International Business.
  • In 2011, Lawrence J. Simon (?65) and his wife Sandra provide an infusion of flexible funds, and in recognition of this donation and his accomplishments as BCF president, the College names the largest conference room in the Newman Vertical Campus in their honor.
  • More than 46% of undergraduates receive need-based financial assistance. Thanks to the Baruch Means Business campaign, the Baruch College Fund provided scholarship aid to more than 600 students with an average scholarship amount of $3,149.
  • In early 2013, with the generous support from donors Daniel Clivner (?85) and Lawrence Field (?52, DCS [Hon.] ?11), Baruch College officially opens the Interim Pedestrian Plaza on 25th Street.

###

About Baruch College:

Baruch College is a senior college in the City University of New York (CUNY) with a total enrollment of more than 17,000 students, who represent 160 countries and speak more than 100 languages. Ranked among the top 15% of U.S. colleges and the No. 5 public regional university, Baruch College is regularly recognized as among the most ethnically diverse colleges in the country. As a public institution with a tradition of academic excellence, Baruch College offers accessibility and opportunity for students from every corner of New York City and from around the world.  For more about Baruch College, go to http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/.

?

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Manny Romero, (646) 660-6141, manuel.romero@baruch.cuny.edu

Mercedes Sanchez, (646) 660-6112, mercedes.sanchez@baruch.cuny.edu

Source: http://www1.cuny.edu/mu/forum/2013/06/19/baruch-college-wins-2013-case-educational-fundraising-award-2/

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Bharti Airtel to use green energy to power its telecom towers in Africa

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Home / Green Energy News / Bharti Airtel to use green energy to power its telecom towers in Africa

MUMBAI: Bharti Airtel plans to use environmentally-friendly energy sources to power its telecom towers in Africa as part of an effort to reduce the operational costs of running the network.

The company plans about 1,300-1,400 towers to be powered by solar energy and some more harnessing wind energy, reducing their consumption of diesel by 11 million litres of fuel just this financial year, said a company spokesman.

An industry expert, who asked not to be named said there is pilferage of around 3-6% of diesel at towers in Africa, that may be curbed with alternate solutions.

Indus Towers chief executive, B S Shantharaju said, the capital cost of setting up a solar power unit is Rs 9-11 Lacs per tower (for a load of 5 KW /tower).? Indus Towers, a joint venture between Bharti Airtel, Vodafone India and Idea Cellular, is the country?s largest telecom tower company.

However, Mahesh Choudhary, founder and chief executive Microqual, a company that builds towers, said the cost could be as high as Rs 50 lacs. Operationally, it involves saving of about a quarter of the fuel cost.

Solar power is functional at around 1,000 towers, said the Bharti spokesman. The Indian telecom operator acquired businesses in 15 African countries for over $10 billion in 2010 from Kuwait-based Zain Telecom. The business over the last three years has not panned out as Bharti had planned.

Bharti was hoping to superimpose the Indian business model in Africa, but the market did not show as much price elasticity as the Indian market when Bharti cut rates. The company has since been channeling all efforts to meet financial targets there, which keep getting deferred, say industry analysts.

Recently, Bharti moved the Africa unit to separate its telecom towers from the telecom operations, to create a company in which infrastructure can be shared, as it does in India. The company is revamping power to its towers in Africa, of which 9% still remain off central power grids.

Article source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/telecom/bharti-airtel-to-use-green-energy-to-power-its-telecom-towers-in-africa/articleshow/20639211.cms

Source: http://www.solarcompanyusa.org/bharti-airtel-to-use-green-energy-to-power-its-telecom-towers-in-africa.html

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Disick goes 'Psycho' in Kanye West promo video

Celebs

17 hours ago

Image: Scott Disick.

kanyewest.com

Scott Disick in "Yeezus" promo video.

If nothing else, the timing is interesting. Just days after Kanye West welcomed a baby girl into the world with girlfriend Kim Kardashian, Scott Disick has now appeared in a promotional video for West's new album "Yeezus" -- in a parody of "American Psycho."

Disick is the father of Kim's sister Kourtney's two children, and he appears frequently on E!'s "Keeping Up with the Kardashians."

In the video, available at KanyeWest.com (note, video contains off-camera violence and un-bleeped curse words), Disick appears as Patrick Bateman (played by Christian Bale in the 2000 movie of the same name), wielding an ax, wearing a raincoat and bearing down on Kim's friend Jonathan Cheban (who sits on a white sofa surrounded by pages of Billboard magazine). Disick/Bateman speaks in a weirdly choppy (no pun intended) manner while re-enacting/re-interpreting the Huey Lewis and the News scene from the film.

Disick asks, "Hey, do you like Kanye West? The early work was a little too hip-hop for me and my taste, but when 'Dark Twisted Fantasy' came out in 2010, I think he really came into his own both musically and lyrically.?

While wearing Bateman's protective clear raincoat, Disick calls "Yeezus" "the most exciting record so far." ?There?s the song 'I?m a God,'? he adds, regarding the album, which drops Tuesday. ?The title practically speaks for itself, but of course the insecurities of the mainstream music press will never understand its true meaning because it?s about me.?

And goodbye to Cheban after that.

The video has "Psycho" author Bret Easton Ellis' approval, apparently; he tweeted Monday that he wrote it.

But is it a good idea, or tasteless? Poking fun at ... something? All of those things are possible, and Kanye West is never afraid to push the envelope. Still, even spoofing scene from a film in which a killer appears to get his kicks from brutally murdering women while reveling in his wealth and sophistication puts a strange twist on West's wholesome new daddy shine, particularly when you've just hired a member of the baby's mother's family to do the dirty work.

What do you think? In bad taste or just typical Kanye? Let us know below!

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/scott-disick-gets-psycho-new-kanye-west-promo-video-6C10361410

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

With Samsung, Jay-Z's business continues to boom

FILE - This May 1, 2013 file photo shows Jay-Z at "The Great Gatsby" world premiere at Avery Fisher Hall in New York. Jay-Z is teaming up with Samsung to release his new album, unveiling a three-minute commercial during the NBA Finals and announcing a deal that will give the music to 1 million users of Galaxy mobile phones. The new album, called ?Magna Carta Holy Grail,? will be free for the first 1 million android phone owners who download an app for the album. Those who do so will get the album on July 4, three days before its official release. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file )

FILE - This May 1, 2013 file photo shows Jay-Z at "The Great Gatsby" world premiere at Avery Fisher Hall in New York. Jay-Z is teaming up with Samsung to release his new album, unveiling a three-minute commercial during the NBA Finals and announcing a deal that will give the music to 1 million users of Galaxy mobile phones. The new album, called ?Magna Carta Holy Grail,? will be free for the first 1 million android phone owners who download an app for the album. Those who do so will get the album on July 4, three days before its official release. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file )

(AP) ? He really is more than a businessman.

Jay-Z's partnership with Samsung for his new album, "Magna Carta Holy Grail," is another sign of how musicians are finding new ways to push, sell and promote their music, and how the multiplatinum performer ? who famously rapped "I'm not a businessman, I'm a business, man" ? continues to leverage his enduring popularity into a successful brand.

Jay-Z will give his new album to 1 million users of Galaxy mobile phones on July 4, three days before the album's official release date. The 43-year-old broke the news about his twelfth album in a three-minute commercial during the NBA Finals.

Details about the Samsung-Jay-Z deal, announced Sunday, weren't disclosed and both parties did not grant interviews.

But Jay-Z's partnership is just another way artists are promoting their music at a time when album sales are low and the digital market has taken the lead in the music industry.

Jim Donio, president of the National Association of Recording Merchandisers (NARM), said top level acts like Jay-Z and Taylor Swift have the power to launch new albums in spectacular ways with various partners.

"For an artist whose album release is an event in itself ... they carry with them a much wider profile in the marketplace that they speak to, so their audience and all the things that they do affords these unique opportunities," he said.

In 2011, Lady Gaga sold 440,000 copies of her "Born This Way" album on Amazon for just 99 cents when it was on sale for two days, helping the album sell 1.1 million in its debut week. Others have also used that trend to sell albums, though not in its debut week: Last year, Phil Collins' greatest hits jumped into the Top 10 at No. 6 ? its peak ? when it was sold for 99 cents for a day. And Bruno Mars' "Doo-Wop & Hooligans" and Demi Lovato's "Unbroken" both jumped about 100 spots on the Billboard chart when they were on sale for 99 cents months after they were released.

Taylor Swift, one of the top sellers in music, had her second platinum-debut week with "Red" last year. Her partnerships for the album included Target, Walgreens and Papa John's (you could order a pizza and a Swift album at the same time).

"Even if you didn't purchase the CD, her face was still on the pizza box," Donio said.

And Prince released his "20Ten" album in 2010 via the Daily Mirror newspaper in United Kingdom.

Jay-Z's new partnership is one of his many business deals. His Roc Nation agency, which manages Rihanna, Shakira and other musicians, recently expanded into the sports world, and he now is helping the careers of New York Yankee Robinson Cano, New York Jets rookie Geno Smith and others. Jay-Z has launched fashion lines, has a string of 40/40 nightclubs, was also the president of Def Jam and owned part of 1 percent of the Brooklyn Nets.

He's still a consistent hit maker and a superstar who transcends music ? which is why Samsung likely partnered with him on his new album. Samsung has chipped away at Apple's share of the mobile market with its Galaxy phones, and companies are relying more on music to lure new customers (Apple last week announced it will debut iTunes Radio, its streaming music service, in the fall).

One of the many questions about the Samsung deal still unanswered: Will the 1 million downloads count toward first-week sales of the album, giving it elite status of debuting with platinum sales, an accomplishment few artists have achieved? Billboard, which tracks album sales and chart information for the industry, did not return emails seeking comment. Samsung reportedly purchased the albums though it's unclear what the price-point was.

Jay-Z made it clear Monday what he felt the trade publication should do.

"If 1 Million records gets SOLD and billboard doesn't report it, did it happen? Ha," Jay-Z tweeted, adding: "Platinum!!!"

Donio said he thinks more deals like Samsung-Jay-Z are on the horizon.

"The record labels that are putting out the music and partnering with a variety of types of commerce outlets are going to look at just anything and everything that may work with that particular artist and that particular album release," he said.

____

Online:

http://www.magnacartaholygrail.com/

____

Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter: twitter.com/MusicMesfin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-06-18-Music-Jay-Z/id-3dc0c3905c9146d28b1f374bd50fecc6

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3-D Printer Brings Dexterity To Children With No Fingers

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3-D Printer Brings Dexterity To Children With No Fingers
An enterprising carpenter and a creative puppeteer teamed up on a do-it-yourself project to build a mechanical hand for a little boy. They created an inexpensive prosthetic and published their designs on the Internet. So far, over 100 children have been outfitted.

Source: NPR
Posted on: Tuesday, Jun 18, 2013, 7:59am
Views: 7

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128657/__D_Printer_Brings_Dexterity_To_Children_With_No_Fingers

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

A Few Thoughts on Vulgar Auteurism - The New Yorker

There has been lots of talk online in recent weeks about a critical phenomenon called ?vulgar auteurism? (V.A.), a term coined?as I just learned from Adam Cook at MUBI?by the critic Andrew Tracy. Though that coinage was skeptical, the term as well as the phenomenon have recently been embraced by other critics, as, for instance, by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, who defines V.A. as enthusiasm for a group of directors who work in what he calls ?genre filmmaking? (mainly action films, but the Farrelly brothers and Jon M. Chu are there, too). But V.A. doesn?t become clear unless seen in the context of so-called auteurism itself. And auteurism, as such, doesn?t exist.

It?s an old story that has become something of the founding myth of the modern cinema: a band of adolescent bohemians in postwar Paris who watched three or four films a day, loved Hollywood movies, and wrote criticism in a little start-up magazine called Cahiers du Cin?ma (founded in 1951), where they asserted that such studio directors as Alfred Hitchcock, Howard Hawks, Nicholas Ray, and Otto Preminger were the auteurs?the authors?of their movies, despite the supervisory power of production executives or the creative priority of the screenwriter. These young critics were flamboyant autodidacts who filled their reviews with references to Balzac and Dostoevsky, Picasso and Stravinsky, as they asserted that the directors whose work they loved were creative geniuses at the same level. They were known in French critical circles as the ?Hitchcocko-Hawksians?; they called their idea the politique?the policy or politics?des auteurs, and even the editor of the magazine that championed them, Andr? Bazin, was skeptical of their views.

At the same time, they wanted to make movies (some of them were already making low-budget, independent short films). Inspired by Orson Welles, who made ?Citizen Kane? at twenty-five, they wanted to make the cinema a young man?s art, to fulfill grandiose dreams of artistic glory while still in their first flush of youth. And to do so, they needed to force their way into an extraordinarily clubby milieu. As they became famous for their enthusiasms, they became infamous for their attacks. That?s where the political side of their devotion to auteurs comes through: in 2000, Jean-Luc Godard told me that he and his colleagues (principally Fran?ois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette) saw themselves as continuing, in effect, the wartime French Resistance??against a certain kind of occupation of the cinema by people who had no business being there?including three-quarters of the French [directors].?

Amazingly, these young critics managed to take over the French cinema as planned, and quickly. Truffaut made ?The 400 Blows? at twenty-six (and, in 1959, won a prize at Cannes for it); Godard shot ?Breathless? at twenty-eight, later that year. They led an entire generation of French filmmakers who became known worldwide as the New Wave, and whose ardor for American films, or, rather, for the films of certain American directors, was reflected in their own. This trait became a mark of the avant-garde?and eventually became canonical (despite the revanchist views of such critics as Pauline Kael, whose lifelong mission seems to have been the containment of directorial individualism).

This quick and context-shorn sketch of a story that?s rich in political and aesthetic history suggests the theoretical basis for what Andrew Sarris brought over as the ?auteur theory?: the recognition of art in works widely despised as impersonal commercial junk, the formation of a counter-canon that owed nothing to the educational system or to official culture, the founding of a private virtual pantheon in which the critics themselves intended to take a place. The New Wave discovered and praised the kind of movies that they wanted to make. They celebrated the directors they wanted to emulate and even imitate (and condemned those they didn?t).

But what?s missing from this positive and positivist mode of the politique des auteurs, the critical practice of so-called auteurism?and, for that matter, from its negative, polemical, political side?is its mighty struggle with the world, the cinema, and the New Wave critics themselves. The point of their criticism is not to interpret the cinema but to change it. The Hitchcocko-Hawksians did more than elbow their own way into the movie business; they established a coherent aesthetic history of the cinema that looked not to its past but to its future as a touchstone, a coming history of aesthetic fecundity. They were psychologists who penetrated to the spirit of works to find the directorial heroes from whom they would derive inspiration. But they were psychologists even more profoundly in their acknowledgment of a movie-made world, of their own movie-formed identities. The cinema was a key aspect of their experience, and they made movie madness, movie-centrism, and voracious cinephilic passion the very premise of the work of the modern director. They reinvented the cinema?and themselves?in self-consciously and personally historicist terms. To make a movie would be to reflect on the history of cinema and to find oneself within it.

In other words, they were a bunch of university-type guys (and almost all of them were men), fitted by temperament and background for study and scholarship, who ran away to join the circus. But along the way, they studied the circus as it had never been studied before, and, when they got into the show, incorporated the results of their critical study (and even its very practice) into their routines. (The New Wave was greatly influenced by German Romanticism, and one of the keys to their cinematic adventure is Goethe?s novel ?Wilhelm Meister?s Apprenticeship,? the story of a young bourgeois who joins a travelling theatre company.) The great paradox of the politique des auteurs is that it was a repudiation of respectable culture?but their disreputable passions were widely received as respectable. Their aesthetic hedonism soon became both a cornerstone of the ardent young intellectual?s self-definition and the main line of academic cinema studies. What started as a vehemently anarchic movement, energized by dropouts and grungily self-marginalizing graduates, got picked up by good students and grad students and systematized, normalized, turned into a sort of career path, as much for professors as for directors.

But the dispassionate, professorial mode is as remote from the spirit of the New Wave and its politique des auteurs as is the encyclopedic taxonomy of directors. Thanks to the Hitchcocko-Hawksians, everyone has long known that Hollywood harbors artists. Their counter-canon has become canonical (?Vertigo? was recently voted the greatest film of all time), and all serious critics look carefully at Hollywood movies. Wes Anderson, Paul Thomas Anderson, Sofia Coppola, Terrence Malick, Steven Soderbergh, David Fincher, and many other celebrated directors of the day are also industry insiders whose commercial success is irrelevant to the appreciation of their originality.

And this, in part, is the background to V.A.: although there?s a widely recognized group of artistic luminaries in Hollywood, there are other, maybe odder, and still-despised corners of the movie business where the distinctive artists haven?t been widely acknowledged, and many of them are found in action filmmaking, which critics overlook because of its low overt intellectual content and perhaps their own revulsion (whether visceral or moral) to gory violence unleavened by Tarantino-esque dialogue and irony. V.A. is a cinematic limbo game of ?how low can you go? in recognizing cinematic art in the medium?s overlooked works. (These films, to put it practically, are those that almost never receive year-end awards, whether the Academy?s or those of critics? groups.) It?s a movement that doesn?t seek to repudiate the canon but to expand it, as Vishnevetsky writes:

?it?s concerned with how the great traditions of American cinema?the things we value about Hawks, Joseph H. Lewis, Anthony Mann, Budd Boetticher, and so on and so forth?have survived in present-day genre filmmaking.

Though the merits of Hollywood genre filmmaking went widely unacknowledged by American critics and by the industry sixty years ago, they are now commonplaces?which is exactly why the system today is the home to radical cinema, with directors working in modes that are less subordinated to genre and more conducive to a thoroughly original and personal mode of expression. This is an age of aesthetic extremes, whether in the demotic blandishments of mass entertainment or the gravity and austerity of the art houses? so-called slow cinema?but neither style or mode has priority over the other. Neither is the guarantor of art. Jacques Tourneur (who, though born in France, spent almost his entire career in Hollywood) and Terrence Malick may have much in common, but Tourneur could never have made as overtly radical a film as ?To the Wonder? in Hollywood, with name actors, in the nineteen-fifties. There is now little need to trawl recondite corners for the most unfathomably fantastic aesthetic extremes, because many of them are nearly mainstream, and the mainstream makes room for them as it formerly didn?t and couldn?t. Despite the intermittently exhilarating cleverness and consistent narrative flamboyance of John Hyams?s ?Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning,? which I was tipped off to by tweets from Vishnevetsky and others, it?s a movie of hints and possibilities, of occasional inventiveness punctuating a long drone of banality, the work of a major riff-ripper, not of a free and total creator. That movie, for all its surprises, hardly holds a candle to Malick?s extremes, or those of Wes Anderson or Miranda July.

In opposition to the constipated naturalism of the art-house consensus?whether the one that prevailed sixty years ago or that of today?crudeness has an intrinsic merit, and it?s easy to detect the same impulse behind V.A. and Godard?s decision to dedicate ?Breathless? to the B-movie studio Monogram Pictures. Getting rid of prejudices?acknowledging that there?s no such thing as intrinsically good acting or cinematography or direction, but only the evidence of artistic inspiration?is as great a discovery for critics as for filmmakers. From the start, Godard repudiated the false merits of so-called production values, but he invested the film not with the elements of the usual Monogram movie but with a rich and complex collection of high-art references, intellectual divagations, and documentary-based techniques, all held together by an aesthetic philosophy that owed more to Sartre than to Hawks. His praise of cheapness and scruffiness wasn?t in the service of those qualities but of the virtues of the grandest, greatest art and ideas he knew. The hat tip to the gangster genre served to embody his most intimate emotions and personal experiences?and, for that matter, to suggest the way that those very intimacies had become tied up, for better or worse, with the experience of moviegoing.

When Godard had Jean-Paul Belmondo identify with Humphrey Bogart in ?Breathless? or gave Michel Piccoli, in ?Contempt,? a tic of Dean Martin?s from ?Some Came Running,? he was making explicit the notion that he and his protagonists defined themselves in terms of the movies they watched. It was no arm?s-length act of criticism but a self-assertion, with all the bravado and the sense of inadequacy that it implied. These slight and urbane men lionized the physical courage and erotic adventure of rough Hollywood heroes in movies that they loved?but those roughhouse movies were far from being all that they loved. The Hitchcocko-Hawksians were also fans of Vincente Minnelli, Nicholas Ray, Ida Lupino (Godard may be the first critic to have recognized her directorial artistry), Stanley Donen, Frank Tashlin, and, for that matter, Kenji Mizoguchi, Carl Theodor Dreyer, Max Oph?ls, Roberto Rossellini, Jean Renoir, Ingmar Bergman, Joseph Mankiewicz, Douglas Sirk, George Cukor, and other directors who weren?t mainly identified with works of male physical heroism. They didn?t just see themselves reflected in actors, in action, or even in directors and direction; they saw themselves in the art of filmmaking.

One of the most fascinating things about the advocates of the politique des auteurs is that?contrary to the often-repeated assertion of their advocacy of directing alone, in terms of abstract visual patterns or habits?they understood intuitively what history has in fact revealed: strong directors are ones who exercise significant control over their screenplays, and who come up with good ones. Despite what the credits may say, it was Minnelli, not the screenwriter, who came up with the great morning-after scene in ?The Clock?; Nicholas Ray, not his screenwriter, who cleared the set and, working with Bogart and Gloria Grahame, came up with a new ending for ?In a Lonely Place.? When Godard wrote with ardent enthusiasm about Hitchcock?s ?The Wrong Man,? he more or less delivered a multi-page plot summary; when he praised Mankiewicz?s ?The Quiet American,? he wished that the direction had been more fiery, but still named it, thanks to the writing, the best film of the year.

In 1962, Godard said, in an interview in Cahiers, ?I am for the politique des auteurs, but not just anybody. Opening the door to absolutely everyone is very dangerous. Inflation threatens.? Three years later, he spoke against the very notion of mise-en-sc?ne, of direction in terms of pure visual style, and said, regarding cinephiles, ?Now that they have understood and acknowledged the American cinema, they don?t want to know anything else?? The single most bewildering line I?ve read on the subject of V.A. is from Matt Singer, at Indiewire, who echoes Vern, the mononymic critic. Vern: ?There?s a lot more new shit to say about Isaac Florentine than Martin Scorsese. I try to do both.? Singer: ?There?s not a whole lot of discovery at this point with the films of Orson Welles.? There sure is; they pack mysteries and majesties, inventive delights and depth of character, that put Welles on the level asserted, at the very start, by the young energumens of the politique des auteurs?that of a Michelangelo or a Dostoevsky. Nothing less is at stake.

The advocates of V.A. do a great service in recognizing that Hyams and P. W. S. Anderson bring a wider range of inventiveness to their material than do, say, Michael Haneke and Olivier Assayas, and in implying that they would likely have made a far better movie out of ?Skyfall? than Sam Mendes did. But, in terms of the absolute values of cinema and of art, that?s a pretty low standard. And the high-flown romantic rapture in the name of art, which is the grand mythic core of the very idea of the cinematic auteur, or, for that matter, the author in literature, is the dream of the complete and total achievement. It?s too grand and historic a passion to be considered vulgar, even ironically.

The cinephilic enthusiasms of the French New Wave weren?t just all-consuming, they were self-consuming: in raising the cinema to the height of the other arts, they also outlined the limits of their own cinephilia. In ?Histoire(s) du Cin?ma? (the first two episodes of which will be screened at French Institute Alliance Fran?aise on July 2nd) and elsewhere, Godard has represented his devotion to movies as a quasi-religious self-sacrifice. The pleasures of V.A. seem altogether too cheerfully painless?except, perhaps, in the long hours spent watching some of the movies in question.

Source: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/movies/2013/06/vulgar-auteurism-history-of-new-wave-cinema.html

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